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by ben_w
2920 days ago
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Your examples are explicitly social sites (networking or forums) where moderation is done by the general public seeing and responding to content. GitHub has a slightly different dynamic, being work focused, and there being no reason for most people to delve into random repositories and flag inappropriate ones. Heck, even the underlying tech assumes problems fixed with patches rather than repository deletion, so if anthing it’s half way between Wikipedia and Geocities. |
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I guess you don't realize this, but GitHub is a social site too.
>where moderation is done by the general public seeing and responding to content.
And this is the same at GitHub, too. Have you never noticed the "Report Abuse" buttons for PRs, users, comments, etc?
> GitHub has a slightly different dynamic, being work focused, and there being no reason for most people to delve into random repositories and flag inappropriate ones.
Except you're looking at a reason right here. GitHub is also used for sharing your work with others, as was the case here. There are instances where such work is against community policies/guidelines, and in those instances, GitHub takes them down. I'm not sure where you're seeing the disconnect here. It's not any different at all than making a post on Reddit and a moderator removing it or someone reporting said post and then it being removed.